Startup Time MCR

Hello,
sometimes i need to deploy some applications with the mcr Compiler.
In principle everything works well -- but:
The first start-up time for an standalone Matlab Application is extremely long. Up to several minutes!
( Env: Fresh installed win xp, virus scanner: trend micro office scan, no other apps)
1. Is this normal?
2. Are there reasons for this?
3. Are there workarounds, like start the mcr at boot time?
Thanks for your help
Hans

Short Startup Time, Enormously Long Login TimeHey all,
As of the last few months, my PowerBook G4 12" (1.33GHz, 768MB RAM,
10.3.9) has been exhibiting an excessively long delay between login and
desktop accessbility. The bootup is extremely fast, but after I type my
name and password in (and after the login window disappears), I get
beachball for almost a full minute before my desktop displays (or any
of my startup items load). I'm interested to know what is causing this
delay, so I'm looking for a few tips:
- What log files should I be looking at to try and diagnose this problem?
- What actually gets loaded between t...

time.clock() or time.time()What's the difference between time.clock() and time.time()
(and please don't say clock() is the CPU clock and time() is the actual
time because that doesn't help me at all :)
I'm trying to benchmark some function calls for Zope project and when I
use t0=time.clock(); foo(); print time.clock()-t0
I get much smaller values than when I use time.clock() (most of them
0.0 but some 0.01)
When I use time.time() I get values like 0.0133562088013,
0.00669002532959 etc.
To me it looks like time.time() gives a better measure (at least from a
statistical practical point of view).
peterb...

time.time or time.clock
I'm having some cross platform issues with timing loops. It seems
time.time is better for some computers/platforms and time.clock others, but
it's not always clear which, so I came up with the following to try to
determine which.
import time
# Determine if time.time is better than time.clock
# The one with better resolution should be lower.
if time.clock() - time.clock() < time.time() - time.time():
clock = time.clock
else:
clock = time.time
Will this work most of the time, or is there something better?
Ron
On Jan 14, 7:05 am, Ron Ad...

SHOW TIME vs. MCR SYSMAN /CLUSTER DO SHOW TIMEDuring the time change I noticed a difference in time using certain commands.
My UTC was set properly across all nodes.
For example SHOW TIME and SHOW SYSTEM reflect a standard time across all nodes:
==================================================
$ SHOW TIME
31-OCT-2004 07:35:15
$ SHOW SYSTEM /CLUSTER /NOPROC
OpenVMS V7.2-1 on node NODE1 31-OCT-2004 07:35:22.63 Uptime 204 20:00:47
OpenVMS V7.2-1 on node NODE2 31-OCT-2004 07:35:22.64 Uptime 187 07:19:01
OpenVMS V7.2-1 on node NODE3 31-OCT-2004 07:35:22.65 Uptime 204 19:31:08
===============================================...

time.time()am I doing this wrong:
print (time.time() / 60) / 60 #time.time has been running for many hours
if time.time() was (21600/60) then that would equal 360/60 which would
be 6, but I'm not getting 6 so I'm not doing the division right, any tips?
On Sat, 24 Jan 2004 13:01:40 -0500, Bart Nessux <bart_nessux@hotmail.com>
wrote:
>am I doing this wrong:
>
>print (time.time() / 60) / 60 #time.time has been running for many hours
>
>if time.time() was (21600/60) then that would equal 360/60 which would
>be 6, but I'm not getting 6 so I'm not doing the divisi...

Is time.time() < time.time() always true?So, I was blazin' some mad chronix, as they say, and got on to thinking
about Python.
The question was, is the statement:
time.time() < time.time()
always true? Seems it should be false, since the statement itself
occurs at one time instant.. but of course we know that python doesn't
execute code that way.. So my question is, why doesn't Python work this
way?
(PS, I wasn't smoking anything, its a figure of speech :) )
On 21 Nov 2006 15:10:25 -0800, flamesrock <flamesrock@gmail.com> wrote:
> So, I was blazin' some mad chronix, as they say, and got on to th...

Oracle 10g enterprise on windows xp proHello everybody,
I'm quite new to oracle so please bear with me :)
I installed Oracle 10g on an old desktop pc (athlon 1,3 ghz, 512mb ram,
via chipset), OS is a fresh and clean windows xp with sp2. What makes
me really wonder: if I log in with the windows user without waiting
some minutes the oracle instance isn't coming up. enterprise manager
tells me that the listener is started, but instance is down. I waited
about 5 to 10 minutes, nothing happend. If I wait for about 3 to 5
minutes before I log in everythings fine!
Thanks for any help / suggestions in advance! :)
Mathias Ringho...

RE: Is time.time() < time.time() always true?Chris Mellon wrote:
> On 21 Nov 2006 15:10:25 -0800, flamesrock <flamesrock@gmail.com>
> wrote:=20
>> So, I was blazin' some mad chronix, as they say, and got on to
>> thinking about Python.=20
>>=20
>> The question was, is the statement:
>>=20
>> time.time() < time.time()
>>=20
>> always true? Seems it should be false, since the statement itself
>> occurs at one time instant.. but of course we know that python
>> doesn't execute code that way.. So my question is, why doesn't
>> Python work this way?=...

time in milliseconds by calling time.time()I am trying to measure some system response time by using the time.time
() or time.clock() in my script. However, the numbers I get are in
10s of milliseconds.
For example,
1248481670.34 #from time.time()
0.08 #from time.clock()
That won't work for me, since the response time may be only a few
milliseconds.
My environment is Solaris 10 with Python 2.4.4 (#7, Feb 9 2007,
22:10:21).
SunOS 5.10 Generic_137112-07 i86pc i386 i86pc
The tricky thing is, if I run the python interpreter and import the
time module, I can get a time floating number in better precision by
cal...

Startup timeIn some communication models the time required to transfer n elements
at a time is given by s + n*w, where s is the startup time and w is the
time for transferring one element. It is also known that one could
overlap communication with computation, i.e. while all n elements are
being transferred the CPU may perform some computations. Does this
overlapping include the startup time or not?
BigMan wrote:
> In some communication models the time required to transfer n elements
> at a time is given by s + n*w, where s is the startup time and w is the
> time for transferring one element. I...

PSP8 Startup TimeA few weeks ago we had a thread about the slow startup time for PSP8
compared to 7.
A common thought was that it was very dependent upon system memory.
I use Win98, 600 MHz.
At the time, I had 128 M ram and my startup time for PSP8 was
30 seconds for the first start, and about
26 seconds for subsequent starts.
Today I installed an additional 256 M, and now get these times
30 seconds for the first start, and about
10 seconds for subsequent.
So, at least for my system, the extra Ram didn't influence the initial start
time at all.
Of course, I get many other benefits, particularly the abi...

cisco startup time?how to find the cisco startup time..or for how long it has been
online/working/powered..
tia
In article <98b39326.0312050757.23b6927d@posting.google.com>,
raptor <raptor@tvskat.net> wrote:
:how to find the cisco startup time..or for how long it has been
:online/working/powered..
"show uptime"
--
Caution: A subset of the statements in this message may be
tautologically true.
"show uptime" are sure or just drunk?
"Walter Roberson" <roberson@ibd.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca> wrote in message
news:bqqa50$ecr$1@canopus.cc.umanitoba.ca...
> In article <...

sshd -i startup timeWhen I run sshd from xinetd, it takes 30 seconds for the password prompt
to appear. sshd is not using up cpu in this time. What is is doing?
Running sshd -i -d -d -d give me:
Feb 14 16:58:12 d1 xinetd[725]: START: sshd pid=4888 from=66.166.198.124
Feb 14 16:58:42 d1 sshd[4888]: debug1: inetd sockets after dupping: 5, 6
....
This is OpenSSH_3.5p1
On 2006-02-15, Joseph Shraibman <jks@iname.com> wrote:
> When I run sshd from xinetd, it takes 30 seconds for the password prompt
> to appear. sshd is not using up cpu in this time. What is is doing?
Reverse resolving the sour...

Application startup timesHi
I'm sure this is a newbie question, and certainly a FAQ.
I'm finding that starting up apps (particularly kate and quanta) in KDE
takes forever - often over 5 minutes. I've googled around, but apart from
general guides to setting up swap partitions, I've not found anything
useful (probably because I dont know what keywords to look for).
This is what free shows while kate is loading, and my hard disk is thrashing
madly:
total used free shared buffers cached
Mem: 256020 242464 13556 0 41156 66628
-/+ buf...

Improving startup timeHi,
I am on Linux (Ubuntu Feisty) and when I start wish, it can take up to 10
seconds before the application launches. The start of my program
looks like this:
#!/usr/bin/wish -f
# vim: tw=0
puts "Starting"
and I sometimes wait about 10 seconds before seeing that message.
Any ideas?
L
--
Prenez la parole en public en étant Speak to an audience while being
moins nerveux et plus convaincant! less nervous and more convincing!
Éveillez l'orateur en vous! Bring out the speaker in you!
Information: laurent@duperval.com http://ww...

MCR Startup optionsHello!
I am just using the Matlab Builder for .NET.
Within the help, the Utility class describes "Startup options" for
the MCR (MatLab Runtime).
Does anybody know some details on this options? I can not find
anything in the help ...
Best regards,
Martin.
...

MCR loading time...Hi
Running a C# program, which is loading plugins witten in matlab,
compiled with matlabs .Net builder. All that works fine, but when i'm
loading the plugins the first time, and by that initializes the MCR,
it takes quite a long time...about 10 seconds. After that it runs
smoothly with no hourglass�.
Does anyone know how to deal with that ??
Thanks!
...

gdm startup timeI'm having some problems with a lengthy gdm startup time on my FreeBSD 4.9
machine. It has a 200MHz Pentium processor with 64MB of system RAM and a
PCI Matrox Millenium card with 4MB of video RAM. I can configure the card
without any problems, and most things work fine (xdm, startx). The problem
is that when I try to startup gdm, it takes on the order of five minutes to
go from the screen with the grey background to the login screen. I've
disabled the graphical login, but it still takes a long time. The only
error message in :0.log aside from the normal X stuff is this:
(EE) ...

Instance startup timeHi folks,
I know, I can find the uptime of an Informix instance
in every onstat, but the date and time of the instance
startup?
Has anyone a nifty solution for that?
TIA,
R�diger
Try onstat -g ntt, and use the open time of the poll or listener threads?
On my system it's a few seconds before On-Line Mode appears in the message
log.
--
Phil@oninit.com
"R�diger M�hl" <ruediger.maehl@web.de> wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> I know, I can find the uptime of an Informix instance
> in every onstat, but the date and time of the instanc...

linux startup time
What is the startup time for linux on a PDA? Is it as bad as on a computer?
Nakas wrote:
> What is the startup time for linux on a PDA? Is it as bad as on a computer?
>
>
My zaurus typically starts at under a 10th of a second after switching
it on.
Arnold
"Arnold Ligtvoet" <news@ligtvoet.org> wrote in message
news:vm9j33pvaufq9c@corp.supernews.com...
> Nakas wrote:
> > What is the startup time for linux on a PDA? Is it as bad as on a
computer?
> >
> >
> My zaurus typically starts at under a 10th of a second aft...

Java startup time From http://www.apple.com/macosx/features/java/
Less memory, faster start
On other platforms, each Java application consumes some system memory,
so you might end up using more memory than you need to when running
multiple Java applications. Other languages, such as C or C++, solve
this problem using what�s called shared libraries. Apple developed an
innovative new technology that allows Java code to be shared across
multiple applications. This reduces the amount of memory that Java
applications normally use. And it fits right into Sun�s Hot Spot VM,
allowing Mac OS X to rema...

PSP8 Startup TimeA few weeks ago we had a thread about the slow startup time for PSP8
compared to 7.
A common thought was that it was very dependent upon system memory.
I use Win98, 600 MHz.
At the time, I had 128 M ram and my startup time for PSP8 was
30 seconds for the first start, and about
26 seconds for subsequent starts.
Today I installed an additional 256 M, and now get these times
30 seconds for the first start, and about
10 seconds for subsequent.
So, at least for my system, the extra Ram didn't influence the initial start
time at all.
Of course, I get many other benefits, particularly the abi...

delta time = time stop
I'm using Python to parse a bunch of s/w test files and make csv files for later report generation by MS ACCESS....(my boss
loves the quick turn-around compared to C). Each log file may contain one or more 'sessions', and each session may contain
one or more 'nodes'.
Each session in the log has an ASCII start and stop time, as does each node.
I have the basic parse part done for parameters, errors, etc., but noticed my routine for determining how long each
session/node took (delta time) was a bit repetitive, so decided to make a 'stand-alone' routine to handle th...

Newbe Startup Time QuestionHi,
I'm completely new to FPGA:s.
Assume the FPGA is up and running and all startup settings are
initiated. How long
does it take to load a new logic scheme into the FPGA? For instance if
I want to
change the scheme from some previously uploaded image algorithm to some
encrypter algorithm, how long time would that take in average? Are we
talking microseconds or
even seconds?
Thanks
Daniel
dannymarcus@gmail.com wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm completely new to FPGA:s.
> Assume the FPGA is up and running and all startup settings are
> initiated. How long
> does it take to load...